"The trees are already starting to show in the valley."
Much of the 38 hectares was low lying and prone to flooding and the trust's plan was to turn this area into a lake that doubled as a silt retention basin. The trust also planned to convert one of the houses into a visitor and student centre.
Councillor Murray Guy asked why, when the council was looking at what to sell, they were not provided with this information. "Your submission has made a great impact on me."
Councillors Catherine Stewart and Larry Baldock said they were unaware of all the work that had taken place on the land.
Another proposed land sale that has drawn widespread criticism from submitters was the Aspen Tree Reserve in Willow St, a small block of land that, until recently, held Tauranga's landmark aspen tree. Historian Jinty Rorke said it was an historically significant site. "The open space with its central tree have been part of the landscape of the township, borough and city since the early 1860s."
It was likely that the tree grew from a fence post put in by missionaries Baker and Clark at the time they built the Mission Institute, an agricultural training school for Maori.
Mrs Rorke offered her time to prepare an interpretation panel for the reserve which she suggested could be replanted with an aspen, elm or willow tree. Willow St was named after the willows that grew in the area until the 1880s.